horse vs trapezium

horse

noun
  • A frame with legs, used to support something. 

  • A hoofed mammal, Equus ferus caballus, often used throughout history for riding and draft work. 

  • A breastband for a leadsman. 

  • A timber frame shaped like a horse, which soldiers were made to ride for punishment. 

  • Any current or extinct animal of the family Equidae, including zebras and asses. 

  • An iron bar for a sheet traveller to slide upon. 

  • In gymnastics, a piece of equipment with a body on two or four legs, approximately four feet high, sometimes (pommel horse) with two handles on top. 

  • The chess piece representing a knight, depicted as a horse. 

  • Cavalry soldiers (sometimes capitalized when referring to an official category). 

  • A mass of earthy matter, or rock of the same character as the wall rock, occurring in the course of a vein, as of coal or ore; hence, to take horse (said of a vein) is to divide into branches for a distance. 

  • A prison guard who smuggles contraband in or out for prisoners. 

  • The flesh of a horse as an item of cuisine. 

  • A xiangqi piece, that moves and captures one point orthogonally and then one point diagonally. 

  • Any member of the species Equus ferus, including the Przewalski's horse and the extinct Equus ferus ferus. 

  • A jackstay. 

  • An informal variant of basketball in which players match shots made by their opponent(s), each miss adding a letter to the word "horse", with 5 misses spelling the whole word and eliminating a player, until only the winner is left. Also HORSE, H-O-R-S-E or H.O.R.S.E. (see H-O-R-S-E on Wikipedia.Wikipedia). 

  • A large and sturdy person. 

  • Heroin (drug). 

  • A rope stretching along a yard, upon which men stand when reefing or furling the sails; footrope. 

verb
  • To pull, haul, or move (something) with great effort, like a horse would. 

  • To play mischievous pranks on. 

  • To frolic, to act mischievously. (Usually followed by "around".) 

  • To sit astride of; to bestride. 

  • To take or carry on the back. 

  • To flog. 

  • To cram (food) quickly, indiscriminately or in great volume. 

  • To copulate with (a mare). 

  • To place (someone) on the back of another person, or on a wooden horse, chair, etc., to be flogged or punished. 

  • To provide with a horse; supply horses for. 

trapezium

noun
  • A quadrilateral with two sides parallel. 

  • The trapezium bone of the wrist. 

  • A region on the ventral side of the brain, either just back of the pons Varolii, or, as in man, covered by the posterior extension of its transverse fibers. 

  • A quadrilateral with two sides parallel and two sides non-parallel. 

How often have the words horse and trapezium occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )